The second episode of the new podcast Voluminous: The Letters of H.P. Lovecraft: “Sex, Drugs and Marketing”.
Related, the latest Ask Lovecraft podcast on “Voice Acting”.
08 Friday Nov 2019
Posted in Podcasts etc.
The second episode of the new podcast Voluminous: The Letters of H.P. Lovecraft: “Sex, Drugs and Marketing”.
Related, the latest Ask Lovecraft podcast on “Voice Acting”.
07 Thursday Nov 2019
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Haffner Press is to publish The Complete Ivy Frost by Lovecraft correspondent and one-time protege Donald Wandrei. A $50 hardcover with 700 pages of mystery-science-detective stories…
Rather than following the usual hard-drinking, trench-coated style of many of his contemporaries, [Wandrei’s] strategy was to mix the logic of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes with the technology of Lester Dent’s Doc Savage.
I’d never heard of Ivy Frost before, but I like the sound of him. These gun-blazing mystery-science stories all appeared in Clues Detective Stories magazine from 1934-37 (not on Archive.org), so one assumes that Lovecraft was aware of them. One wonders how may ‘little nods to Lovecraft’ Wandrei might have snuck into the stories.
Let’s hope for a Kindle ebook version in due course. In the meantime there’s also I.V. Frost: Tales of Mystery & Scientific Investigation which is a 270-page collection of pastiche stories by later writers, available as a budget Kindle ebook as well as a paperback from Moonstone.
In other news on Wandrei, S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated and he notes that the Lovecraft letters book…
Letters with Donald and Howard Wandrei and to Emil Petaja is soon to appear from Hippocampus Press.
06 Wednesday Nov 2019
Posted in Scholarly works
An Italian Lovecraft blog has a short new interview with Heather Cole, custodian of the Lovecraft archives at The John Hay Library, Brown University.
Another recent post looks inside 10 Barnes Street, as it is today.
05 Tuesday Nov 2019
Posted in Astronomy, Historical context, Scholarly works
What better time than bonfire/fireworks night, to learn that Falvey Memorial Library at Villanova University have opened up their newly acquired notebook to find Lovecraft drawings of a comet…
The latest manuscript added to Villanova University’s Distinctive Collections is the rare astronomical observation notebook by the noted horror author H.P. Lovecraft from the years 1909-1915. Observing from his Providence, Rhode Island home, Lovecraft noted, and then drew, various celestial phenomena including passing comets.
Slated for digitization in November and full transcription by a notable Lovecraft scholar soon after.
It’s interesting that the young Lovecraft took binoculars, presumably on his bicycle, to good observing spots way out toward Rehoboth. Given that he notes his location (not necessarily his house roof or adjacent ground) with some precision, one could presumably recreate these observational moments in full. This could be done via the free Stellarium software and its ‘time-and-place travel’ function, or similar. Although, the last time I looked, Stellarium doesn’t do comets in graphical form.
04 Monday Nov 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
Recently up for sale at The H. P. Lovecraft Historical Society, and sold, a Lovecraft Bust.
Gage Prentiss, the celebrated weird sculptor of Providence, has sculpted a life-sized statue of HPL which hopefully will soon have a permanent home in Providence. This bust of HPL is a replica of the full sized one, but at 10 inches by 5 inches, it’s much easier to ship and put on display in your home. It’s a tasteful and fitting tribute to the master of weird fiction.
Very appealing, and it definitely seems to evoke the dreamier side of Lovecraft.
03 Sunday Nov 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings
Don Herron muses on the first edition of A Look Behind the Derleth Mythos.
I see that the third edition can now be had at around $5 as a Kindle ebook.
02 Saturday Nov 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings
Even now, the once-great Yahoo service is continuing to crash and burn. The Pulp Net brings news that Yahoo Groups are to be erased…
“Then earlier this month, the future of Yahoo Groups became clear: They were going away. As of yesterday (Oct. 28), users can no longer upload content to the groups. Then on Dec. 14, Yahoo will wipe user content from its servers.”
Groups.io will port your Yahoo Group, for a price.
02 Saturday Nov 2019
Posted in Historical context, Podcasts etc.
The H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society are posting Lovecraft letters, as audio readings. The first in the “Voluminous” ongoing podcast is his short opening letter to Robert Barlow, which runs 24 minutes with additional discussion before and after by Sean Branney and Andrew Leman of the Historical Society. The actual letter starts at 9:50 minutes in, if you want to skip introductory stuff you already know, and is from the book O Fortunate Floridian: H. P. Lovecraft’s Letters to R. H. Barlow.
There’s a handy RSS feed for the show, which should give you a drop-down by which to download the source .MP3 file.
No listing for the podcast on ListenNotes yet, but I know that one has to have five episodes before you get an iTunes listing for any new podcast. Once on iTunes it will presumably percolate through to other pod-catching services and apps.
01 Friday Nov 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings
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01 Friday Nov 2019
Posted in Maps, Odd scratchings
Lovecraft on Martin Vargic’s new Map of the Literature II.
31 Thursday Oct 2019
Posted in Housekeeping, Odd scratchings
October departs, and the rain-glittered pinnacle of Tentaclii Towers stands stark and black against a moonless sky. Strange little tappings may be heard within, but lesser than of late. Yes, it was a lightweight month here on the blog. Daily postings continued here, but I am unlikely to maintain that over the winter. There may be soon days here when there are no posts, since I have several books for which the writing needs to be finished. I also have a large amount of reading to catch up with. First up are the two Lovecraft Annual journals which arrived recently, and in which I’ve only read the book reviews so far. Expect reviews of those on Tentaclii, when you see them. My thanks for my Patreon patrons for helping fund the purchase of the Annuals. I see that the Patreon total is still at $58 U.S. a month, though. I’m aiming for $100 a month, so please make generous Lovecraftians and others aware of the blog and my need for my Patreon to grow. Thanks.
My blog’s “Postcards from Lovecraft” feature continued my occasional interest in Lovecraft’s various waterfronts: Lovecraft’s post-New York riverside cafes in Providence; my “Outward Bound” post which looked briefly but poetically at Lovecraft’s evocation of his own city’s harbour; and rather less poetically a post on the Fulton St. fish-market in New York City which was found to be amply illustrated with postcards and pictures. A more sedate but, it turned out, equally watery location included the park bandstand at Roger William Park — which was on a sort of pier that splayed out above the lake. One imagines problems with the midges rising from the depths on warm summer nights, but in those days they made liberal use of insecticide.
My blog’s weekly “Kittee Tuesday” feature also once veered in the direction of historical context, with “The Office Cat at the Brown Daily Herald”. This shed light on an editorial office tradition which appears to have been formative in Lovecraft’s youth, and thus of his own preference for ‘a kittie in the study’. Incidentally, this month I read elsewhere of a tradition among the Edwardian youth of pretending to be far older than they were (a sort of “young fogies” thing, but way back in the 1900s) and I wondered if that similarly fed into Lovecraft’s sense of himself as ‘an old gent’. Was his pose actually once part of a wider youth movement, to which he later clung — as he did to so many other passed-away things?
Sadly I feel I will have to scale back on these “Kittee” and “Postcards” blog features until next Spring. As I said above, I have several books that need to be finished. The “Kittee” posts often take much searching, and the “Postcard” posts do have a tendency to ramify if I let them, in terms of needing wider and wider historical investigations once one starts looking at a topic or a locale. Expect these posts when you see them, and there may well be weeks when they’ll be absent.
In non-fiction journals, I noted that the Blood ‘n’ Thunder journal has re-started, with a focus on scholarly fan-essays on “adventure, mystery and melodrama” in the pulps. The Italian Lovecraftian Dimensione Cosmica journal has also returned, and I translated the relevant contents pages to English.
In books, Io Sono Providence: la biografia di H.P. Lovecraft, the Italian translation of S.T. Joshi’s monumental biography, should be in the mail as I type; all three Lovecraftian Proceedings were noted as being available in very affordable Kindle ebooks; and forthcoming is a new wide-ranging Religion and Comics series from Claremont Press. In terms of collectables, a big Derleth collection popped up at L.W. Currey and was linked.
In audio, Lovecraftian multimedia sonics from Germany; the Lovecraft Geek Podcast made a welcome return with a fine and focused new episode; and a new audiobook of the HPL-fave The House on the Borderland appeared on Librivox.
Various creative endeavours and bits of art were noted. In comics I was pleased to learn that Marvel’s b&w 1970s and 80s Savage Sword of Conan is being properly reprinted as handsome volumes; and I was equally pleased to see as a follow-on that Howard Days 2020 will be “Celebrating REH in Comics”.
A clutch of academic calls and opportunities were noted, including a funded-PhD in Music and Multimedia Composition at Brown University; and the annual Joshi Endowed Research Fellowship 2020. I produced an annotated “The City” (1919) to mark the 100th anniversary of H. P. Lovecraft’s cosmic mythos in November 2019.
31 Thursday Oct 2019
Posted in Astronomy, Scholarly works
The annotated “The City” (1919), a poem by ‘Ward Phillips’ (H.P. Lovecraft). With an introduction and annotations by myself.
This 10,000-word PDF has been produced and published here to mark the 100th anniversary of H. P. Lovecraft’s cosmic mythos in November 2019.